top of page
  • Staff Writers

Afghans selling their children to survive, Senate told


This Afghan-heritage child faces a starkly different future in the USA

Australia needs to do more to help tens of millions of Afghans facing starvation and death just months after the Taliban seized control, an inquiry has been told.


The situation in Afghanistan is so dire families are forced to sell their own children to afford food just four months after the Taliban took over. 


Daughters are being sold for between $US200 to $US500, a Senate inquiry into Australia's involvement in Afghanistan was told on Monday.


Around 23 million Afghans are facing acute hunger and the situation is only expected to get worse as winter approaches.


Australian Council for International Development director Tim Watkin called for Australia to do more, saying the longer aid takes, the more Afghanistan will suffer:

"What we are seeing and hearing in Afghanistan is more assistance is needed and it is needed urgently."

Humanitarian groups told the inquiry Australia needed to increase its Afghan refugee intake to at least 20,000 and labelled the government's response to the crisis "wholly inadequate".


More than 130,000 people in Afghanistan have applied for protection in Australia.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has previously said there would be a minimum of 3000 humanitarian visas set aside for Afghan refugees following the takeover. 


Save the Children Australia deputy CEO Mathew Tinkler called for at least $100 million in humanitarian funding and for the government to prioritise the survival of children in Afghanistan, telling the inquiry:

"First and foremost, the Australian government must ensure that the survival and wellbeing of Afghan children are at the heart of the national response. 
"Afghanistan is rapidly evolving into the world's worst humanitarian crisis.
"Without immediate action from governments like Australia, the situation will become catastrophically worse."

Around 22 million children are at risk and one million will die, the inquiry heard. 


bottom of page